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Sweet Magnolias Season 2: Everything We Know

The cast is just as eager to get back to Serenity as you are.

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A Fleabag Reunion Is Upon Us: Phoebe Waller-Bridge Is Andrew Scott’s His Dark Materials Dae

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When the Entanglement Ends

Will Smith, Jada Pinkett-Smith, and August Alsina inspire one writer to reflect on her own summer of being a “unicorn.”

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Robert Pattinson and Suki Waterhouse Confirm They’re Still On With PDA-Filled Walk After 2 Years of Dating

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Selena Gomez’s Friends’ 28th Birthday Tributes to Her Include So Many Unseen Pics of Her Living Her Best Life

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Everything We Know About The Princess Diaries 3 So Far

But is the Queen coming, Sandra Oh?!

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Pool Noodle Shields, Undercover Feds, and Walls of Moms: This Is Portland Right Now

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A Series Imagining Hillary Clinton’s Life If She Never Married Bill Is Heading To Hulu

The show is based on ‘Rodham,’ Curtis Sittenfeld’s 2020 novel that rewrites Hillary’s history.

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Part 2: Coming-Out Stories From Young Black Creatives

For Pride Month, WWD asked young Black creatives to share their coming-out stories. While Pride Month is over, the challenges facing the LGBTQ community, and their experiences, require more than a once-a-year focus. So WWD reached out to more Black creatives about their own coming-out stories to keep the conversation going.
 

El Lewis
My coming out was more of an invitation in. The first person in my family I felt most comfortable enough to tell was my mother. I remember the moment being fueled with liberation and I just proceeded to tell her the full truth about myself and my interests. It was a candid conversation that was uncompromising, yet vulnerable. It felt like I opened the door and it was her choice to walk in and have a seat.

Lex Porter
First, I’d like to introduce myself. My name is Lex, my pronouns are she/her/hers and I identify as a lesbian. I recently started a podcast called “She|Her|Dyke” to create a space where masculine-presenting women can share their stories and day to day struggles.
“Coming out” was never a thing to me. At a young age I knew I was different, but I was unaware of the need to “come out” about it. I

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The Uneasy Privilege of the Daytime Nightgown

It’s become the unofficial uniform of “checking out.” But who, exactly, gets to do that?